MOLECULAR MODELING STUDIES ON OXIDATION OF HEXOPYRANOSES BY GALACTOSE-OXIDASE - AN ACTIVE-SITE TOPOLOGY APPARENTLY DESIGNED TO CATALYZE RADICAL REACTIONS, EITHER CONCERTED OR STEPWISE
Rm. Wachter et Bp. Branchaud, MOLECULAR MODELING STUDIES ON OXIDATION OF HEXOPYRANOSES BY GALACTOSE-OXIDASE - AN ACTIVE-SITE TOPOLOGY APPARENTLY DESIGNED TO CATALYZE RADICAL REACTIONS, EITHER CONCERTED OR STEPWISE, Journal of the American Chemical Society, 118(12), 1996, pp. 2782-2789
Galactose oxidase is a mononuclear copper enzyme which oxidizes primar
y alcohols to aldehydes using molecular oxygen. A unique type of cross
-link between tyrosine 272, an active site copper ligand, and cysteine
228 provides a modified tyrosine radical site which is believed to ac
t as a one-electron redox center. Galactose oxidase is highly selectiv
e in its processing of hexopyranose substrates. Turnover of D-galactos
e is stereospecific for cleavage of the pro-S hydrogen. D-Galactose is
an excellent substrate but its C-4 epimer D-glucose is not a substrat
e and will not even bind at 1 M concentration. Any proposed mechanism
for galactose oxidase should be able to account for these stringent he
xopyranose substrate specificities. In this paper we report molecular
modeling studies of active site binding of postulated radical carbon-h
ydrogen bond cleavage transition states of D-galactose and D-glucose.
Differences in specific enzyme-substrate interactions provide convinci
ng explanations of the pro-S and galactose specificities. In addition,
a previously unconsidered concerted radical mechanism appears to be j
ust as plausible as the more standard stepwise radical mechanism via a
ketyl radical anion intermediate. Regardless of whether a stepwise or
concerted mechanism is operating, the active site appears to be well
designed to bind radical transition states and perform radical enzyme
catalysis. The detailed models developed here for ground state and tra
nsition state enzyme-substrate interactions provide insight to guide m
echanistic studies using both radical-probing substrates and site-dire
cted mutagenesis.